The Key West Citizen Newspaper, November 29, 1933, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Published Daily Except Sunday By Qi INC. nly Daily Newspaper in Ke in a West and Moaroe imei Bar ane waste a ee os : ated iene te excontyey, quiet 3 “for republication i a = not on eheer i is paper and Pate foakl ngewe wm pubs ots known on application. _ a Spvingpeinrs NOTICE cage n= ie ten will be cinreed for St AH respect, obttnary. not! the rate of 1 sige ser ise whieh 2 uees i st ones publish anonymous munications. on i footy: REPRESHNTATIVES ETE RE TROT; “ang: mithout invory never be : "afrata’ to attack'W ‘or to applaud right; always fight for progress; never be the or- gen or the mouthpiece of any person, clique, faction or class; always do its utmost for the public welfare; never tolerate corruption or Injvstien; denounce vice and praise virtue; » commend good done by individual or organ- Ipation; tolerant of others! rights, views and opinions; print only news that will elevate and not contaminate the reader; never ecom- “Inflation cannot come too soon for me. —Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi. My marriage was just another noble ‘experiment gone wrong,——Mary McCormic. , Itis reported that President Roosevelt _ ds at work on a book which will list the Ten “Best Tories of 1938.—H, I. ‘Philips in The tie: “York Sun. { The nation still has time to choose be- -& guided recovery and an unguided “yevolt—President Glenn Frank of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. x In our concern for forgotten men, we -fhust-not create forgotten institutions—the -nation's schools,—-Dr, Glenn Frank, presi- “dent of Wisconsin University. One of the younger politicians growing -up in Illinois is said to look more like Lin- , Colii already than Lincoln himself ever dar- ted to.--The Minneapolis Journal. a, America is like the typical patient. perl ms 26 wi teh him in “a weeke—the la Tos A An eles Ti Only f h. men’ sti “looking enh in pre ith’ brains.—Mrs. Mario za, Phila- Iphia, federal-state employment head. The faith of that ‘ola nations had in ‘our military equipment in 1914 saved us from becoming involved in the World War: —President Rdmund Schulthess of Swit- zerland, H. G. Wells says the age of insecurity will come to an end about 1990. It was good of Mr, Wells not to be specific and “make the figure a round 2000.—The Knick- erbocker Press. wit k Ht." exiean’ peons Have ho word for perfitler, We haye, but Pg gt bs 44 pil won't let us tell ~ what it is.—Olin Miller in The Thoms- ton (Ga,) Times. People who jump at conclusions are having a grand time with that news item about the English journalist who disap- peared just before interviewing Hitler.— Boston Evening Transcript. ~ Men are often called upon to admire Spectacles invelving not anly farce but brute violence, This is contrary to Chris- ‘tian education as well as the sentiments of human dignity and purity—Pope Pius XL ishly. wrecking him-. THANKSGIVING DAY The first Thanks; sgiving Day observed in America was that proclaimed by Gover- nor Bradford of Plymouth cology in 1621, | the year following the ignding of the Pil- | grims. During colonial days similar ob- servances were held on various occasions. | {¢: President Washington by proclama- tion set November 26, 1789, as a day of general thanksgiving, but during the. eariy history of the republic such chservances were irregular, and the several s ‘.s gen- erally set their own dates for hal: ..y them. It wag not until 1864, under President Lincoln, that the last Thursday was settled upon as Thanksgiving Day th. oughout the United States. The fixing of this date is said to have been largely due to the effor.s of Mrs. Sarah J. Hale, an American author, who began agitating for a uniform annual date about 1840, Each year she wrote to all state governors asking that they name the last Thursday in November,.and gradually they fell in with her idea. On the Pilgrims’ first Thanksgiving Day wild turkey formed the. chief consti- tuent of ire feast, and and ever since: tur- key has been inseparably associated with the day’s observance. TIMID STREAMLINING The new automobiles, to be seen in this winter’s shows, are more. streamlined, but manufacturers as yet are merely play- ing with the idea. Automotive engineers know what to do, and would go the whole way, but sales managers are afraid of do- ing anything so suddenly as to seem revo- lutionary—afraid the buying public would not stand for it: Manufacturers compro- mise between the two, favoring the sales experts, Thus even next ye..s ears will ex- emplify only in a superficial] way the streamlining that has been worked out on airplanes and is now being applied to rail- road cars and rail buses. When motor manufacturers really ac- cept the idea wholeheartedly, engincers say, mileage per gallon at high speeds may be doubled. ‘The power of wind resist- ance is seldom appreciated by motorists. As speed doubles, this resistance is multi- plied by eight. It will be a revolution indeed, pearance, when the real streamlining comes. The car body may be turned around and run big end forward, with a pointed stern, no matter where the motor is. All projections and broken surfaces will be smoothed ‘off. Wasteful air drag caused by the irregular, unclosed bottom of the car, which not only holds the car back and muddies its under-works, but tears roads to pieces, wil] be ayoided by a flow- ing underbody cover, in ap- WORSHIP DEAD ACTOR According to a London film critic, no man in history ever inspired such adoration from women as did Rudolpt Valentino, the famed: Italian-born film star -who died in 1926 at the age. of 31. Five years ‘ago his admirers among ‘Englich | women formed the Valentino As- ciation, which now has branches i in many countries, By these women, few of whom ever saw him except on the screen, he has been, elevated. to something like sainthood since his death, and his memory is kept alive among them by making gifts in his name, distributing his photographs, through correspondence and in other ways. Valentino received a good education in his native Italy and came to the United States in 1913, first appearing as a dancer, then in musical comedy, and after being stranded in San Francisco he entered mo- tion pictures at Hollywood, taking minor parts. He scored his first great success in “The Four Horsemen,” after which his career until his death was a succession of tiiumphs. He was twice married and twice divorced, He died from peritonitis follow- ing operations for gastric ulcer and appen- i dicitis. Conceding his great ability as an ac- ter and the charm of his personality, the fact that he is sti! ‘erally worshiped by thousands of wome: throughout the world is somewhat difficult to understand. Perhaps the reason we don't under- stand all this is that we don't understand women. America has lost the vision of God in the last 15 years, The devil seems to have the country on the run.—Billy Sunday, evangelist. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN POCOC OR OeCeCOeEesecercaaeseneaeerNT = teesee=nwee Daily Cross-word Puzzle 9800000099080 C COLE HOSSOESZONEREZOCCCERQCEMIVERDONS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie ACROSS . Stage plier Architectural pier |. Spheres 14. Warrants 6. Comporition "Tor yp L Addition to a building . Carried b Aerifgrm fluid . Jumbled type . Less danger- ous . Kind of bjseult : Dutch equiy- plent of the liter . Apvertisement » Quitit 2. Biting of acrid . Color nt wide shaped . Belonging ously family Game animal §. Swell cut . Insertion . Mire Mure peculiar es . Record of a ship's voy: age 8 sise ae Bae id yy | | ae) ae Seine . Rodent . Oil of 1080 petats Necessity . Spread loosely : Like . Poems |. Score at base- 2. Sprinkles with dirty water Drinkin; vesse . Bouquet Spanish dance 21. Armed con- Hlict 2. Firearm 26. Pear-shaped fruit | PZ CP HM Bad CeCe Anna 2eee a jp! 27. Branches of fearning . War vessels of a certain » Kind or nut Night before an event It is said that the Devil you have so often about is really quite a person aft- er all, His is an ancient title and although he is described as the “youngest apprentice in a print- ing shop” and is a printer’s errand) boy, there is more behind his title ‘than just that. One of the most famous of the early printers was Aldo Manuzio, who flourjshed in Venice during the fifteenth century. He em- ployed a negro slave in his office and many of his customers he- lieved the boy to be an imp of, Satan. This proved to be bad for trade so Manuzio decided to use the boy to advertise his business. |He paraded the bay through the streets and had the public. crier announce, ‘I, Alde Manuzio, print- er for the Holy Church and the} Doge, have this day made public) jexposure of the Printer’s Devil.; |All who think he is not flesh and ‘blood may come and pineh him.” Business picked up after that, which just goes to show that ad- ivertising paid, ’ TODAY THINGS HAVE | CHANGED, NEWSPAPER AD- |VERTISING HAS TAKEN THE 'PLACE OF THE OLD METHODS. Ventured 37. Sumo ag | in 2 pul place *) |. Therefore : Floor covering 3. Climbing oF- ean Of vi . Shakespearean bera . Measure of, length + Earthen vias Curded cigih 3. Adhesive Exterior 58. Horses of '@ tain . Waste allows ance Short stroke on 8 teles graph in- strument Hewing tool 51 are ort fOr man's name Tre measure IT IS THE WHIP AND SPUR; FOR ALL BUSINESS. | eooceccocscecevcoccsones ‘Today's Horoscope | erocensoneososenes ; Patient, contented, happy, and self-possessed is the nature that comes from this degree. The ex- ‘istence may be uneventful, but it jwill probably be happily suited in the domestic ties, even though the \life be patiently devoted to an ;unambitious calling, or a reward ‘leng deferred. useless life, though it may be a simple one, or perhaps not given lits due meed till too late, eveccegacevece Today’ s Anniversaries eneeevegecercs 1729—Charles Thomson, Quaker school principal who secretary in ‘congress, born in Ireland. at Lower Merion, Pa., Aug. 1824. was Died 16 1799—Amos Bronson Alcott, jNew England teacher, and transcendentalist, born Wolcott, Conn. Died at cord, Mass., March 4, 1888. at 1811—Wendell Phillips, Bos- ton lawyer, lecturer and reform- er, perhaps the most noted anti- slavery orator of his day, born in Boston. Died there, Feb. 2, 1884. 1816—Morrison R. Waite of Died in} 23, S., born at Lyme, Conn. Washington, D. C., March 1888, 1822—Edward A. Hopkins, a forgotten American and sometime tween the two continents and help- ed deyelop the railways: df Soyth June 16, 1891. 1832—-Louisa May, Aleott, au- jthor of “Little Wom@n” and other noted children’s books, daughter of the above, born at German- town. Pa. Died in Boston, March 6, 1888. 1867—William J. }professor, president of | Univ, Greenville, S. C., Southern Baptists, born near Gal- latin, Tenn. Died May 29, 1933 Smagteh. Mexten teh. One bert Remedy is gnara for any case. anthorited 1 faite —Ad Furman AN drug and your money if Octagon Special Powder, 2 for | Se; for sale by all retail stores. | et. 25-tf. "FAST DIRECT FREIGHT | Slterrate Wedeesdays. Also NEW ORLEANS to KEY WEST Sailings os alternate Turedays fetivy, Bex Went Second Day Fol- CLYDE-MA iors © V SMETH. Agent Ohio. 7th Chief Justice of the U. | America. born in Hieb urge Died}, McGlothlin, | leader ofj j eccce| the | i ' every Continental} | | reformer } { + one felt & ih | j i } BP. WaAITE a [i ‘s It is far from a! | (Til] 8 p. m. Thursday) WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1938. eee | TODAY’S WEATHER | Temperature* Lowest Normal Normal Precipitation .... change in temperature; modergte northeast and east winds. Florida: Fair tonight and Thufs- ral 68 .70} day; slightly warmer in extreme -72jnorth portion, Jacksonville to Florida Straits: .0 Ins, | Moderate northeast and east winds 06 Ins,,and fair weather tonight and M Rwad Feserd covers 34-hour period Thursday. e 8 Oacauceau's Almapac Sun® rises \Sun sets | Moon rises j Meoa sets | ‘Tomorrow | High | Low Mncometer at 8 n. Sea level, 80.22. Lowest. | Abilene Atlanta Boston | Buffalo | Chicago ! Denver | Detroit ‘Duluth | Eastport \El Paso - Hatteras Helena | Haren | Jacksonville’: \KEY WEST: Les Angeles: . j Miami —. 2. Minneapolis - New York Pensacola Phoenix Pittsburgh St. Louis . ‘Salt Lake City .. } Blt. Ste. Marie {Seattle . Tampa - } Washington ‘Williston | Wytheville Key West and Vicinity: {tonight and Thursday; Welock shin morning. pM. 8: rs ne today: Highest Last Night Yesterday |western sections of the 76 66 48 40 56 46 46 80 20 62 64 30 34 70 73 58 74 32 b4 WEATHER FORECAST East Gulf: shifting to .f pings. Moderate northeast east’ or southeast WEATHER CONDITIONS Pressure is moderately low this 29 morning from the upper Missis- :41/|Sippi and Missouri valleys south- jward to the upper Rio Grande {Valley and thence westward over | California; while high pressure ‘areas cover eastern and north- country. pBain or stiow has occurred since ; yesterday morning in portions af the lake region, and from the northern Rocky moyntain states westward to the north Pacifie coast, and there have been rains in southern California and Ari- igona, Temperatures have risen from the upper Mississippi valley {and western lake :region south- 'ward over the Gulf and South At- jlantie states, in the northern | Rocky moyntain states and in New | England, with readings 26 to 29 jdegrees above normal in portions j9f..Qklahoma and Missouri, and jcolder weather has overspread the ‘southern plateau and portions of the Pacific states, with tempera- | ¢tures below freezing in western | Oregon. | G. 8, KENNEDY, | Official in Charge. Only 29.5 percent of Ohio farms are still on unsurfaced roads, eom- peared with a national average of ; 70.2 percent. _, ease ee - 8 not ont Eat hoa an estimate of the number listening on a coast-to-coast network “The great thing Radio | can do is to bring Inspired Music into the home” consul in South America, who did| @ good deal to promote trade be-j “It is not necessary to know about music— can simply feel it, and léve it. “Listening to a cathedrab organ or to _fahty; great orchestra —~ wha of us has not uplifted and refreshed, as by the caol elean air of the mountains? **To rixy mind, the gregt thing radia can do is to bring Inspired Music into the hame. My comrades of the Philadelphia Orchestra and I welcome this wonderful opportunity.” bole! Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., the people who make Chesterfield, want you to hear the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra—ta many people, the greatest musical organi- zation on the American continent, We know you will like in the same way we you will enjoy ‘COLUMBIA COAST-TO-COAST-NETWORK 4 Every night in the week The cigarette that’s MILDER TASTES BETTER @ rts Tosca Co.

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